Etymologies

Examples

Subjectively, this manifests itself in the perception that the "feelings" elicited by art and music are in fact the ACTUAL feelings the artist felt, somehow, dizzyingly 'captured' by the work, immortalized, held in 'static communion' by the canvas, or musical recording, or camera... and now able to enrapture and enchant us indefinitely.

And although one would be amazed at the prodigious child who could follow to the letter its snaky progress, it captures brilliantly that moment when adults enrapture children by behaving like children themselves.

It appears that there was no attempt to notate this savoir-faire, because, in order for it to be endowed with its full relevancy, it probably had to spring spontaneously from the particular moment and enrapture the listeners by its inestimable character of something ephemeral and, therefore, eminently human.